relativistic shocks
Recently Published Documents


TOTAL DOCUMENTS

176
(FIVE YEARS 25)

H-INDEX

32
(FIVE YEARS 6)

2022 ◽  
Vol 924 (1) ◽  
pp. L12
Author(s):  
J. R. Peterson ◽  
S. Glenzer ◽  
F. Fiuza

Abstract Plasma streaming instabilities play an important role in magnetic field amplification and particle acceleration in relativistic shocks and their environments. However, in the far shock precursor region where accelerated particles constitute a highly relativistic and dilute beam, streaming instabilities typically become inefficient and operate at very small scales when compared to the gyroradii of the beam particles. We report on a plasma cavitation instability that is driven by dilute relativistic beams and can increase both the magnetic field strength and coherence scale by orders of magnitude to reach near-equipartition values with the beam energy density. This instability grows after the development of the Weibel instability and is associated with the asymmetric response of background leptons and ions to the beam current. The resulting net inductive electric field drives a strong energy asymmetry between positively and negatively charged beam species. Large-scale particle-in-cell simulations are used to verify analytical predictions for the growth and saturation level of the instability and indicate that it is robust over a wide range of conditions, including those associated with pair-loaded plasmas. These results can have important implications for the magnetization and structure of shocks in gamma-ray bursts, and more generally for magnetic field amplification and asymmetric scattering of relativistic charged particles in plasma astrophysical environments.


2021 ◽  
Vol 923 (1) ◽  
pp. L14
Author(s):  
Ben Margalit ◽  
Eliot Quataert

Abstract Numerical models of collisionless shocks robustly predict an electron distribution composed of both thermal and nonthermal electrons. Here, we explore in detail the effect of thermal electrons on the emergent synchrotron emission from subrelativistic shocks. We present a complete “thermal + nonthermal” synchrotron model and derive properties of the resulting spectrum and light curves. Using these results, we delineate the relative importance of thermal and nonthermal electrons for subrelativistic shock-powered synchrotron transients. We find that thermal electrons are naturally expected to contribute significantly to the peak emission if the shock velocity is ≳0.2c, but would be mostly undetectable in nonrelativistic shocks. This helps explain the dichotomy between typical radio supernovae and the emerging class of “AT2018cow-like” events. The signpost of thermal electron synchrotron emission is a steep optically-thin spectral index and a ν 2 optically-thick spectrum. These spectral features are also predicted to correlate with a steep postpeak light-curve decline rate, broadly consistent with observed AT2018cow-like events. We expect that thermal electrons may be observable in other contexts where mildly relativistic shocks are present and briefly estimate this effect for gamma-ray burst afterglows and binary–neutron-star mergers. Our model can be used to fit spectra and light curves of events and accounts for both thermal and nonthermal electron populations with no additional physical degrees of freedom.


2021 ◽  
Vol 2103 (1) ◽  
pp. 012014
Author(s):  
S M Osipov ◽  
A M Bykov ◽  
M Lemoine

Abstract We present a self-consistent Monte Carlo model of particle acceleration by relativistic shock waves. The model includes the magnetic field amplification in the shock upstream by cosmic ray driven plasma instabilities. The parameters of the Monte Carlo model are obtained based on PIC calculations. We present the spectra of accelerated particles simulated in the frame of the model.


2021 ◽  
Vol 2103 (1) ◽  
pp. 012009
Author(s):  
V I Romansky ◽  
A M Bykov ◽  
S M Osipov

Abstract Radio observations revealed a presence of relativistic supernovae - a class of objects intermediate between the regular supernovae and gamma-ray bursts. The typical Lorentz-factors of plasma flows in relativistic radio-bright supernovae were estimated to be about 1.5. Mildly relativistic shocks in electron-ion plasmas are known to efficiently accelerate radio-emitting electrons if the shock is subluminous. The inclination angle of the velocity of subluminous shock to the ambient magnetic field should be below a critical angle which depends on the Mach number and the plasma magnetization parameter. In this paper we present particle-in-cell modeling of electron acceleration by mildly-relativistic collisionless shock of different obliquity in a plasma with ratio of the magnetic energy to the bulk kinetic energy σ ≈ 0.004 which is of interest for the relativistic supernovae modeling. It was shown earlier that a development of the ion scale Bell-type instability in electron-ion relativistic shock may have a strong influence on the electron injection and acceleration. In the time period of about 1500 ω p i − 1 (ωpi is the ion plasma frequency) after the shock initialization the magnetic field fluctuations generated by Bell’s instability may significantly decreases number of accelerated electrons even in a sub-luminous shock. We study here the evolution of the electron spectra of subluminous shocks of different obliquity. This is important to for modeling of synchrothron spectra from relativistic supernovae.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kazuya Takahashi ◽  
Kunihito Ioka ◽  
Yutaka Ohira ◽  
Hendrik van Eerten

Author(s):  
C. Guidorzi ◽  
F. Frontera ◽  
G. Ghirlanda ◽  
G. Stratta ◽  
C. G. Mundell ◽  
...  

AbstractThe coming decades will establish the exploration of the gravitational wave (GW) Universe over a broad frequency range by ground and space interferometers. Meanwhile, wide-field, high-cadence and sensitive surveys will span the electromagnetic spectrum from radio all the way up to TeV, as well as the high-energy neutrino window. Among the numerous classes of transients, γ–ray bursts (GRBs) have direct links with most of the hot topics that will be addressed, such as the strong gravity regime, relativistic shocks, particle acceleration processes, equation of state of matter at nuclear density, and nucleosynthesis of heavy elements, just to mention a few. Other recently discovered classes of transients that are observed throughout cosmological distances include fast radio bursts (FRBs), fast blue optical transients (FBOTs), and other unidentified high-energy transients. Here we discuss how these topics can be addressed by a mission called ASTENA (Advanced Surveyor of Transient Events and Nuclear Astrophysics, see Frontera et al. 18). Its payload combines two instruments: (i) an array of wide-field monitors with imaging, spectroscopic, and polarimetric capabilities (WFM-IS); (ii) a narrow field telescope (NFT) based on a Laue lens operating in the 50–600 keV range with unprecedented angular resolution, polarimetric capabilities, and sensitivity.


Author(s):  
Arianna Ligorini ◽  
Jacek Niemiec ◽  
Oleh Kobzar ◽  
Masanori Iwamoto ◽  
Artem Bohdan ◽  
...  

Abstract Mildly relativistic shocks in magnetized electron-ion plasmas are investigated with 2D kinetic particle-in-cell simulations of unprecedentedly high resolution and large scale for conditions that may be found at internal shocks in blazar cores. Ion-scale effects cause corrugations along the shock surface whose properties somewhat depend on the configuration of the mean perpendicular magnetic field, that is either in or out of the simulation plane. We show that the synchrotron maser instability persists to operate in mildly relativistic shocks in agreement with theoretical predictions and produces coherent emission of upstream-propagating electromagnetic waves. Shock front ripples are excited in both mean-field configurations and they engender effective wave amplification. The interaction of these waves with upstream plasma generates electrostatic wakefields.


2020 ◽  
Vol 501 (1) ◽  
pp. 329-336
Author(s):  
Yotam Nagar ◽  
Uri Keshet

ABSTRACT The spectral index s of high-energy particles diffusively accelerated in a non-magnetized relativistic shock, such as in a γ-ray burst afterglow, depends on the unknown angular diffusion function $\mathcal {D}$, which itself depends on the particle distribution function f if acceleration is efficient. We develop a relaxation code to compute s and f for an arbitrary functional $\mathcal {D}$ that depends on f. A local $\mathcal {D}(f)$ dependence is motivated and shown, when rising (falling) upstream, to soften (harden) s with respect to the isotropic case, shift the angular distribution towards upstream (downstream) directions, and strengthen (weaken) the particle confinement to the shock; an opposite effect on s is found downstream. However, variations in s remain modest even when $\mathcal {D}$ is a strong function of f, so the standard, isotropic-diffusion results remain approximately applicable unless $\mathcal {D}$ is both highly anisotropic and not a local function of f. A mild, ∼0.1 softening of s, in both 2D and 3D, when $\mathcal {D}(f)$ rises sufficiently fast, may be realized in ab initio simulations.


2020 ◽  
Vol 499 (4) ◽  
pp. 4961-4971
Author(s):  
Hirotaka Ito ◽  
Amir Levinson ◽  
Ehud Nakar

ABSTRACT Strong explosion of a compact star surrounded by a thick stellar wind drives a fast (>0.1c) radiation mediated shock (RMS) that propagates in the wind, and ultimately breaks out gradually once photons start escaping from the shock transition layer. In exceptionally strong or aspherical explosions, the shock velocity may even be relativistic. The properties of the breakout signal depend on the dynamics and structure of the shock during the breakout phase. Here we present, for the first time, spectra and light curves of the breakout emission of fast Newtonian and mildly relativistic shocks, that were calculated using self-consistent Monte Carlo simulations of finite RMS with radiative losses. We find a strong dependence of the νFν peak on shock velocity, ranging from ∼1 keV for vs/c = 0.1 to ∼100 keV for vs/c = 0.5, with a shift to lower energies as losses increase. For all cases studied the spectrum below the peak exhibits a nearly flat component (Fν ∼ ν0) that extends down to the break frequency below which absorption becomes important. This implies much bright optical/ultraviolet emission than hitherto expected. The computed light curves show a gradual rise over tens to hundreds of seconds for representative conditions. The application to SN 2008D/XRT 080109 and the detectability limits are also discussed. We predict a detection rate of about one per year with eROSITA.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document